Navigate Left
  • Most Americans know how to go into a mosh pit or grind, but that isn’t dancing. From: Pexels

    Opinion

    Americans should dance more

  • Me meditating on a Barudaber temple in a 2016 Indonesia. Photo taken by my Mom, Iris Giladi.

    Opinion

    The depth of my apreciation for India

  • Front view of Kendall Hall

    News

    Jewish students react to antisemitic vandalism on campus, President Perez responds

  • Cruz Mora is on the ballot for Live Oak City Council this November. Photo Credit: Cruz Mora

    Features

    Public administration student takes on local-level politics

  • Pro-Palestine banners put up on Butte Hall by Students for Justice in Palestine. Photo taken May 1, 2024. Photo taken May 1, 2024 by Molly Myers.

    News

    Ceasefire campaign launches on campus, President Perez sends email on protests 

Navigate Right
Breaking News
Chico State's independent student newspaper

The Orion

Chico State's independent student newspaper

The Orion

Chico State's independent student newspaper

The Orion

Students grow plants at gym for cafeteria

MULVEY.jpg
Brianna Mulvey, senior ecological, evolutionary and organismal biology major and Associated Students compost education coordinator brought the idea of tower gardens to the Wildcat Recreation Center. Photo credit: Lana Goddu

The Wildcat Recreation Center is growing its own vegetables using new technology that grows plants at double the rate and uses 90 percent less water.

The new grow beds, called tower gardens, are placed on the pool deck of the gym facility. Brianna Mulvey, senior ecological, evolutionary and organismal biology major and Associated Students compost education coordinator, was the brain behind the tower gardens. She is working with A.S. dining services to put the vegetables into the Marketplace Café’s local lunch.

“As soon as Eli showed me it I thought, ‘We have to bring this to Chico State,’” Mulvey said.

Mulvey said she was inspired to bring the tower gardens to the WREC by Eli Goodsell, former A.S. sustainability coordinator, who got the idea from a conference he attended in San Luis Obispo.

Mulvey got the funds for the garden through the A.S. Sustainability Fund, managed by the A.S. Sustainability Fund Allocation Committee. The fund was suspended this semester after Goodsell resigned from his position.

The WREC is currently growing basil, lettuce, Swiss chard, kale, oregano and cilantro, Mulvey said. It has already used some of the basil in salad dressings served at the Marketplace Cafe.

The tower gardens take up less room than normal gardening beds because they don’t grow outward, she said. They have a 20 gallon water tank that feeds the plant through the center of the tower and filters down through each of the single pods.

They are fed a mineral solution every two weeks and can grow wherever there is sun and power outlets.

The power outlet is connected to a tube that pumps the water to the plants constantly, so the plants are always being watered.

Electricity costs less than 70 cents per month, Mulvey said.

Lana Goddu can be reached at: [email protected] or @theorion_news on Twitter

Leave a Comment
More to Discover

Comments (0)

All The Orion Picks Reader Picks Sort: Newest

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *